80 ,:':: '::" .. SAÙCEFQR' tHe' GOOSE o",r candle wa ed "stivér,,:.ptated:' boWl 'k ps ::: auce'. and",graviês..",þlP-'Ìng ':'hot fOr' :econd helpings, Ôn -w... ' ...r \ em's 'of sif r r :';X :::.' plate featuring @ Od V:.lu. x .: . - -, ."HØlds :12 0%41". . ., {'" i ... 'I... :- .... :.. .... .... ;1'<<. .y/',::: :',' .. :,' '<"" .hWf. " ..::: '"-,, . .:;: ..-::. -::-:: i r' t .$1.6 . ., ..'" . ,,' " " *- ",.' + ,,'" ., :-.<: .>t..: ...,:.... ,? .- >å "<':0 fei, Write',:or::' ' 'Jean ,Trëe Pl 7 : ï90" h , , -=:.". u'" " ,', ,', "'. -t , .'S(' .. .::;... ,,} .. " .r " r ., ':'<.- "\:: ..: 7: v " t '\.' , .{ . , ,<- :;:;,; " .. y . .. :-.:" ........ . . .. BLAèK,.TARR4GORUAM FIFTH AVENUE AT 48TH STREET. NEW YORK 36. N.Y. EAST ORANGE MANHASSET WHITE PLAINS, Traditional... .....eo:.w,....... . - . \. - .... .........- .. - RH_ ... - / ( . '.. \ "- L '-' # f\ ,, ,j< " ......t' " A , - Walnut chest and chair in Manteika finish. From the Cantonesian collection. For an illustrated booklet. \j describing the entire collection please write, enclosing 25<&, to H eri tage- H enredon, Dept. NI02. High Point, N C. (Name of your nearest dealer sent on request ) j , "':: \r. . : :::-- -. , ,g ; 111 if;.. -<, :+.. '. .. _.." i">: :. <-', , P'" ) "' ^ <, '.t" , - þ ; 'i I ' ) r :-. " } l .' ,< , 1.1: ... ' h 1 ... "< ,} ,< t ... III Heritage Henredon f. 'f. , I -- . cause she seemed to him the ideal type to become the mother of a prodigy. Ruth later made a VIanhattan debut that caused somethIng of a stir, but by the time she reached adolescence, her brief glo\v of international celehrity had fizzled out. j\s for the Menuhins, no"", independ- ent of Ehrman, they settled do "",Tn between engagements in a house in VIlle-d' A vray, a small to"",Tn near Paris, "",There Yehudi and his sisters read Dante in ItalIan and Descartes in French. WIlla Cather, a close friend of the Menuhins for some years, and kno"",Tn to the children as Aunt Willa, read Shakespeare to them, and Yehudi, HephzIbah, and Yaltah put on etrnest family theatricals of the Dante-and- Beatrice type. In 1934, Hephzibah, who was fourteen and had made her concert debut as a pianist in San Fran- cisco six years before, began to appear in sonata recitals with her brother at the Salle Pleyel, in Paris, and at the Queen's Hall, in London. Critics found that Hephzibah was a remarkahle pianist in her o"",Tn right, and her brother showed from the first a chivalrous tendency to subordinate his playing to hers and to allo"",T her an equal place in the lime- light. At horne, he took to studYIng the philosophy of Spinoza and "",Torrying about the moral and political problems of the world. To help clarify his think- ing, he drew up an elaborate diagram in "",Thich the principles of good and evil, the perils of the flesh and the beauties of the spirit, "",Tere represented in geometric form. At the age of eighteen, he "",Tas quoted in the ne"",Tspapers as saying, "Someday, maybe not in my lifetIme, but someday, people "",Till live in a world "",There machines take the monotony out of life. There will be no stupid tasks such as driving taxicabs, "",Torking in mInes, doing an) sort of thing because of the necessity of existing. . . . Above all, there must be educatIon-educa- tion in how to employ leisure time in a "",Torld "",Thich "",Till offer mostly leisure hours. . . . Life would not be so terrible if it "",Tasn't forced, a.nd it is not fair that an v human being should he forced to work set hours, day after day. If such a system marks civilization, it would be better to return to the "",Tild life." ";. I 1 , T HE Menuhins carne back to this country late in 1934, landing in New York, "",There the son "",Tent around to Revillon Frères and bought his moth- er an expensive coat that she still wears nO"",T and then-a peculiar garment that has a plain black cloth exterior, suitable to the austere temperament of a Tartar